Play · VAULT Festival
VAULT Festival, London · 24–28 January 2018
A chilling queer noir murder mystery set in London's chemsex scene. When Anthony's one-night stand turns up dead on the Hampstead Heath tumulus, everyone assumes he's another casualty of the city's chemsex culture. But after a second body is discovered, Anthony suspects foul play — and is thrust into a terrifying, drug-fuelled journey to uncover the truth.
This production was later remounted at Soho Theatre in 2019 — see the Soho Theatre run →
Winner of an Origins Award for Outstanding New Work at VAULT 2018.
Designer: Alison Neighbour · Sound Designer: Nick Manning · Lighting Designer & Production Manager: Lucy Adams · Stage Manager: Megan Bly · Movement Director: Natasha Harrison · Assistant Director: Hugh Wyld · Assistant Stage Manager: Alannah Kelly · Illustrator & Graphic Designer: Will Adams · Filmmaker: Ciara O'Grady · Production Photographer: Michael Carlo · Artistic Mentor (Producer): Vicky Graham · Artistic Mentor (Playwright): Louise Stephens · Publicity: iN BLOOM
Partner organisations: 56 Dean Street Wellbeing Programme, HIV Voices, Relate.
Public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England. With support from the Peggy Ramsay Foundation. Published by Nick Hern Books in Plays from VAULT 3.
Gallery
Production photography by Michael Carlo.
Press
★★★★This theatrical experience comes at you like an express train hurtling down the tracks.
Boyz★★★★Tumulus … uses well-crafted and engaging storytelling, with powerful movement direction, sound, and lighting to show aspects of the deep, intimate, and devastating experiences surrounding the chemsex scene in London. Making sharp and poignant references to the previous epidemic affecting the gay community – HIV/AIDS – Tumulus offers insight not only into the individual characters' life experiences, but perhaps into the collective experience of gay men going through yet another 'spiritual crisis'. The tone and atmosphere of noir as a storytelling technique are a poignant tool to explore the moral ambiguity, fatalism, and pathos of the subject matter.
LGBTQ Arts Review★★★★Adams's well-crafted script [is] filled with witty one-liners and bullet-speed dialogue.… As a whole the play is fun yet interesting and whilst it touches on the serious topic of chemsex culture and points out potential dangers, it doesn't endeavour to pass judgement or preach to the audience. A definite must-see.
Attitude★★★★The 'queer noir' premise is fantastic – and the cast's frantic but controlled performance captures the delirium, paranoia, and confusion of both the plot and its setting; the dialogue enhances this paranoia.
Everything TheatreThis is a neat piece of writing. A murder mystery, set in North-West London's chemsex scene, that simultaneously supplies a nagging study of addiction and a compelling cross-section of the capital's active gay community.… It's Midsomer Murders, just with more Class C drugs and blowjobs.
The StageA cracking piece of theatre, a "chilling queer noir" that entertains as much as it elucidates.…Recommended
There Ought to be ClownsIn fact, Tumulus exists almost entirely at the busy intersections of queerness and genre. It is all-at-once a noir, thriller, comedy, drama, whodunnit, parody, pastiche; and begs the important question: is queer itself a genre? Maybe queerness is the very act of riffing off established genre? Maybe the notion of establishment is fundamentally at odds with the values of queerness? A staple of the capital's fringe venues over the last ten years, is the 'chemsex play' now a distinct genre in its own right? The restlessness of Tumulus keeps turning these questions over and over in its imagination, and is rarely slight enough to risk a concrete answer. Instead, Tumulus – the word meaning 'ancient burial ground' – persistently asks what gay men are still burying today. Too often their sexuality; forever their anxiety; and sometimes, their best friends.… Tumulus is important.
The Play's the ThingMedia Coverage
Pick of the Week:
The Stage,
The Londonist,
What's on Stage
Pick of the Festival:
The Stage,
There Ought to be Clowns
Gay Times — The Connection of Chemsex: Does it offer a real sense of community? (by Christopher Adams)
Broadway World — Interview with Ian Hallard
Gaydio — Interview with Ian Hallard
Published
The playscript is published by Nick Hern Books (2018), and also appears in the collection Plays from VAULT 3.
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